Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Friday, April 22, 2016

Those Who Are Hoping For Serious Change May Be Bitterly Disappointed With The New ADHA.

This appeared earlier today.

Govt names new e-health leadership

Preparing for the abolition of NeHTA.

By
The federal government has named the 11 board members set to steer its new e-health directive as it prepares to establish the Australian Digital Health Agency in place of the soon-to-be-abolished NeHTA.
The ADHA will lead the Commonwealth’s revised approach to electronic healthcare, which has been driven by the recommendations of the 2013 Royle review into the failings of the personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR).
That review (pdf) found that the agency in charge of implementing the government’s e-health policy, the National e-Health Transition Authority, “does not have the confidence of the industry or audience that it is attempting to represent”.
It said the composition of the NeHTA board, which was made up of directors general from state, territory and federal health departments, failed to reflect the objectives of the agency. It also said stakeholder ideas and concerns were prone to be overruled or lost in the bureaucracy of the organisation.
Health Minister Sussan Ley in response pieced together a panel of health officials to work alongside bankers, health insurers, practitioners and private healthcare providers to head the ADHA.
The board will be chaired by former head of the South Australian health department Jim Birch.
In a statement, Birch said his board boasted “a strong involvement with health consumers and digital innovation, bringing the right skills mix to drive the innovation needed to meet the ongoing and future health needs of Australians”.
Read about the other nominees here:
Reading through the list it is clear that what is most missing is private sector e-Health expertise and rather little clinical expertise. I wonder what the new chair makes of the fabulously high quality Draft Strategic Plan he has been given to work with.
We can all wait and watch to see what happens - and certainly it is good there are some people outside the Government Sector involved - but I still rather fear little will change.
The last hope is the quality and experience of the CEO - who is yet to be appointed. An inspired choice could make all the difference - time will tell! I note from Google news the new chair says he is said to be 'utterly committed' to making the myHR work. Given it needs to be scrapped, or at least fundamentally re-designed so as to be unrecognisable from what we have now, that will be quite a trick, but he had to say that to get the job I bet! 
David.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

The Macro View - General And Health News Relevant To E-Health And Health In General.

April 21  Edition
The macroeconomic stresses seem to have eased a little more with markets rising or stable around the world.
With Budget Night now May 3 we won’t have long to wait to see what is happening. The Budget now seems to now be very minimalist with any major reform seemingly off the table. It seems there is going to be some exciting political times until we get there!
Given it is only 2-3 weeks away I guess we just wait and watch. Is seems sin-taxes are also back on the agenda!
Here is a summary of interesting things up until the end of last week:
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General Budget Issues.

  • Apr 11 2016 at 12:15 AM

Bad timing for company tax cuts

The times could hardly be less propitious for cutting corporate tax rates. Malcolm Turnbull and his Treasurer Scott Morrison now look like postponing the cut foreshadowed in May's budget. They have only themselves to blame for the latest twist this paper reported on Thursday.  It is made no sense to raise – then dash – expectations of wide-ranging tax cuts in a budget stubbornly in deficit. Tony Abbott had the timetable right, deferring talk of big tax cuts until a post-election White Paper.
An OmniPoll showed almost no voter support for a company rate cut. That was before the Panama Papers revealed that a single law firm facilitated money laundering, tax avoidance and evasion on a vast industrial scale. The ongoing outrage adds to pressure for the government to do more to crack down on  use of tax havens before it cuts the company rate.
Life was so much easier for Paul Keating. He didn't lose much political skin when he lifted the company rate from 46 per cent to 49 per cent during Australia's "golden era" of economic reform in the mid-1980s. The rate then fell in a series of steps usually funded by scrapping corporate tax breaks – it's how John Howard cut the 34 per cent to 30 per cent.
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  • Apr 11 2016 at 1:45 PM
  • Updated Apr 11 2016 at 7:16 PM

Federal debt load 'pushing against' AAA boundary, warns NAB

The Commonwealth's growing debt load is rapidly approaching the point at which Australia will lose its AAA credit rating, warns a report by NAB.

Why NAB chair Ken Henry is worried
Two of the nation's big four banks have warned the federal government risks losing the patience of credit agencies, whose AAA rating for Australia has helped underwrite some of the lowest household mortgage rates on record.
With politicians likely to be tempted into new and underfunded spending promises in the looming federal election, National Australia Bank's global head of policy research, Peter Jolly said Commonwealth debt was now "pushing against ratings agencies' AAA boundary".
Mr Jolly's remarks were echoed by Michael Blythe, chief economist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, who said while the ratings agencies "have been very patient with us; there's a limit to their patience".
"The reality is that we've seen this continued pushing-back of the return to surplus, and even if we manage to get there on the current timetable, it will be the most drawn-out return we've seen," Mr Blythe told The Australian Financial Review.
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  • Apr 13 2016 at 11:45 PM
  • Updated Apr 14 2016 at 6:42 AM

Scott Morrison lays out budget priorities

Treasurer Scott Morrison says next month's federal budget is designed to help more Australians, especially young people, to get into work and off welfare and will invest in education, health and social services, "in a fairer and more sustainable way"
Outlining the aims of the budget to a closed dinner of the Business Council of Australia on Wednesday night, Mr Morrison said the budget would achieve these things in a manner " that taxpayers can afford – rather than higher taxes and higher debt".
"This is the budget that the Australian economy needs now", he said. "It doesn't matter when the election is held, this is the budget that we need to deliver. It will be a budget focused on clearing a path for jobs and growth."
The Treasurer's comments suggesting the government will invest in education, health and social services come despite the government appearing to be at an impasse over what it does about huge and politically contentious spending cuts to health and education outlined in the 2014 budget. Twenty per cent cuts to university funding remain particularly contentious.
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10:42pm April 13, 2016

Morrison gives clues about budget

By AAP
Treasurer Scott Morrison has provided a few clues about the federal government's upcoming budget in a speech to Australia's business leaders.
In a speech to the Business Council of Australia (BCA) overnight, Mr Morrison said his first budget will focus on keeping taxes low, include policies that would make Australia "more innovative, more competitive and more outward looking" and back infrastructure projects.
This is how the government will drive jobs and growth, the treasurer said.
"But it's also how you strengthen our nation's finances - by supporting the revenue gains that come from growth we have, rather than higher taxes," Mr Morrison told the annual forum dinner on Wednesday night.
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Moody’s warns Morrison on budget, triple-A rating

  • The Australian
  • April 14, 2016 3:49PM

Michael Roddan

Jared Owens

Treasurer Scott Morrison says comments by a global ratings agency are not a licence to start raising taxes to protect Australia’s triple-A credit rating.
Moody’s Investors Service says the Turnbull government’s preference for spending cuts over policies aimed at revenue raising will make balancing the budget difficult, warning that government debt would continue to climb and put pressure on the nation’s AAA-rating.
“The best way to protect our triple-A credit rating is to have a strong budget, a solid budget that is backing growth and that is backing jobs, and that is what out budget will do,” Mr Morrison told reporters in his southern Sydney electorate on Thursday.
The warning comes after NAB and JPMorgan both cautioned this week that Australia’s AAA credit rating could be in jeopardy unless the government maintains fiscal restraint in the upcoming federal budget.
Moody’s senior vice president Marie Diron said Treasurer Scott Morrison’s focus on curbing spending to the exclusion of revenue raising measures meant the government’s target of a balanced budget by 2021 would make it unlikely to achieve.
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Budget 2016: Cristopher Pyne talks up tobacco tax

  • The Australian
  • April 15, 2016 8:05AM

Jared Owens

Industry Minister Christopher Pyne has spruiked the economic windfall from levying “very high” tobacco taxes, amid speculation that Treasurer Scott Morrison’s budget will target smokers.
Labor is framing the budget fight as a debate over “choices” as he offers more spending on schools but also plans tax increases to raise $105 billion over 10 years, including $47.7bn by raising the price of cigarettes to $40 per 25-pack by 2020.
However the policy has been criticised by both Labor MPs — who fear the impact on poorer Australians, who are more likely to smoke — and Tony Abbott, who lashed the policy as a “workers’ tax” that could deprive seniors of one of their few pleasures.
Mr Morrison yesterday flagged “revenue measures” in the budget aimed at “reducing the tax burden in other parts of the economy, and wherever possible to continue to drive down the deficit”.
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Treasurer plays down budget tax hikes

Updated: 1:12 pm, Friday, 15 April 2016
AAP
Treasurer Scott Morrison has sought to play down speculation of tax hikes in his first budget, describing such talk as a little too enthusiastic.
Mr Morrison set the hares running on Thursday when he said the May 3 budget would contain 'revenue measures'.
That was taken to mean tax increases, including a hike in the tobacco excise and a crackdown on superannuation tax concessions on high-income earners.
Mr Morrison said his comments were 'entirely unremarkable'.
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15 Apr 2016 - 8:30am

What we know, and don't, about the budget

We're less than three weeks away from Scott Morrison's first budget and very little is known about what it might contain.
Source: AAP
15 Apr 2016 - 8:30 AM  UPDATED YESTERDAY 8:30 AM
WHAT DO WE KNOW?
WHAT WE KNOW
* There won't be a fistful of dollars as the government lives up to its promise of living within its means.
* Prudence, fairness and responsibility will be the catchwords.
* Measures will be included to boost jobs and growth as the economy transitions from the mining investment boom.
* The much-touted tax reform package will be included.
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One in two voters is fully reliant on public welfare

  • The Australian
  • April 16, 2016 12:00AM

Adam Creighton

Sid Maher

Nearly half of voters in the looming federal election will rely ­entirely on government payments for their incomes, confront­ing Scott Morrison with a demographic and political powder keg as he frames a May 3 budget ­relying on spending restraint to rein in the deficit.
Analysis by The Weekend Australian has revealed that more than 44 per cent of voters, almost 6.4 million people, are ­either public sector employees (1.89 million) or wholly dependent on federal government pensions, allowances and parenting payments (4.48 million). The figure grows further when private sector workers who receive more in welfare than they pay in tax are added.
The Coalition holds seven of the 10 most welfare-dependent seats in the nation while Labor holds three.
ANU researcher Ben Phillips estimated that only 43 per cent of the adult population excluding public sector workers were net taxpayers last year, bringing the actual total voter-dependency ratio to well over 50 per cent.
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Health Budget Issues.

Medical device makers slam ‘dishonest’ claims by health insurers

  • The Australian
  • April 12, 2016 12:00AM

Sarah-Jane Tasker

Australia’s medical technology sector has hit out at what it calls a “dishonest” campaign by private health insurers in their pursuit of price cuts to devices on the prostheses list.
Susi Tegen, chief executive of the Medical Technology Association of Australia, s aid the industry supported reform of the prostheses list and the private health insurance industry, provided it benefited patients.
The prostheses list, which the government uses to regulate how much health funds have to pay for prosthetics, human tissues and device implants, is being redesigned and renegotiated by the stakeholders who use it. The government is also reviewing the private health insurance sector.
Insurers claim high prices for items on the prostheses list — well in excess of what public hospitals pay for comparable devices — have added to premium increases. Funds lowered this year’s premium increase in light of the Turnbull government’s promise to review the list.
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Health reform data ‘is not accurate’

  • The Australian
  • April 12, 2016 12:00AM

Michael Owen

The key justification of the South Australian government’s overhaul of its health system — that “we’re killing a lot of people ­unnecessarily” — is not supported by reliable data, an independent review has found.
This comes as ALP national president Mark Butler yesterday called on the state government to halt its health plans for Adelaide’s western suburbs, saying it was undermining community confidence with “an unacceptable model and budget”.
The latest criticism of the controversial Transforming Health policy, which includes closing hospitals and the moving services, is a blow to Premier Jay Weatherill’s case for radical reform.
As justification, the Premier and his Health Minister, Jack Snelling, have relied upon alarming data in a Transforming Health blueprint that says “on average, South Australia experiences 500 more deaths each year in our hospitals compared with other hospitals across Australia”.
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Patients to shell out for scans and blood tests

April 14, 2016 5:00am
Bianca Keegan The Cairns Post
BLOOD tests, swabs or biopsies could cost patients up to $30 as pathology services prepare to be hit with Federal Government funding cuts.
The proposed changes, which would occur on July 1, would remove bulk-billing incentives paid to pathology providers to save the Federal Government $650.4 million over four years.
But president of Pathology Australia Nick Musgrave said providers would have no choice but to pass on the costs through a co-payment system.
“We just can’t absorb this cut, there will need to be some way of recouping the loss of payments,” he said.
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NPS MedicineWise says it has reaped $400 million in PBS savings

Michael Woodhead | 13 April, 2016 | 
NPS MedicineWise says it has delivered $400 million in PBS savings from its rational prescribing activities since 2010 and is now making inroads into MBS spending on pathology tests and imaging, its annual evaluation report shows.
The agency, which receives around $45 million annually in Department of Health funding, said it had achieved PBS savings of $69 million in 2015 and, for the first time, also achieved significant savings to the MBS of around $33 million, according to its latest evaluation report.
The MBS savings estimates were based on reductions in ordering of CT scans for low back pain and vitamin D tests following feedback sent to GPs as part of the Quality Use of Diagnostics program.
PBS savings the agency said came from programs targeting prescribing of anticoagulants, PPIs, opioids for chronic pain, antipsychotics, lipid-lowering agents and antidepressants.
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Health is also clearly still under review as far as its budget is concerned with still a few reviews underway and some changes in key strategic directions. Lots to keep up with here with all the various pre-budget kites still being flown - although narrowing it seems to be largely focussed on Super! Enjoy. Only a few weeks to the Budget.
David.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

I Suspect That The Department Is Getting Worried About The Public Level Of Trust In The myHR.

This popped up a few days ago:

Setting the record straight!

Published 12 April 2016
There are a number of positive and negative assertions circulating the media, so each month we will be ‘setting the record straight’ and highlighting which My Health Record rumours are facts and which are not, so you can be confident when dealing with your customers. This month we set the record straight on privacy.
Here are some of the misrepresentations, along with the actual facts:
Assertion: Individuals cannot control who sees their My Health Record
Not true. Individuals can ask their healthcare provider not to upload certain information to their My Health Record and can also choose to be notified when their My Health Record is accessed. They can also set controls to restrict access to certain information in their My Health Record or to prevent certain healthcare provider organisations from seeing anything in their My Health Record. For example, individuals may want to restrict access or ask a provider not to upload their sensitive health information, such as sexual or mental health issues accessible by all healthcare providers.
Assertion: Government agencies will be able to access people’s personal data
There are very limited circumstances where anyone, including the Government, may access someone’s My Health Record. Those circumstances are narrower than under existing laws like the Privacy Act 1988, so My Health Record actually provides more protection of sensitive health information than exists for health records outside of the system. Limited circumstances include:
  • For the purpose of providing healthcare to an individual, including in an emergency;
  • For law enforcement purposes – in line with current powers under the Privacy Act, enforcement bodies may access information for particular investigations;
  • For the purpose of a healthcare provider’s indemnity cover – for example as part of a provider’s defence (or that of their medical indemnity insurer, acting on their behalf) in proceedings of negligence. This reflects longstanding rights of providers to use health information in records they hold in their own systems as part of proceedings.
Assertion: Personal information won’t be safe - the My Health Record system is a gold mine for hackers and blackmailers
The privacy of people’s personal information is taken extremely seriously. A range of legislative and technical mechanisms work together to ensure the privacy and security of people’s information in the My Health Record system.
My Health Record uses bank-strength security including strong encryption and firewalls, secure logins and audit trails. It meets Australian Government Security Standards and is regularly tested for security compliance and vulnerability. These standards are regularly updated to address emerging cyber-threats. The staff who operate and maintain the My Health Record system are vetted and undergo police checks, consistent with government standards.
Further, the unauthorised collection, use or disclosure of information in the My Health Record system, is subject to both civil and criminal penalties where an action is deliberate or reckless. These penalties do not apply where a mistake has been made – for example, if a healthcare provider inadvertently or accidently accesses an individual’s My Health Record. The penalty for not complying with the My Health Records Rules is $18,000 for individuals and $90,000 for bodies corporate.
Further information about the My Health Record system’s privacy and security policies can be found on the My Health Record website
Here is the link:
All good? Well no actually.
On the first Assertion we need to remember that myHR cannot know which staff member is using the Practice Credentials to access the myHR. With that being the case the patient essentially has no control to who locally will have access and who might make changes and so on.
Equally the patient has to be very well informed to know just what might be deduced from what is uploaded in a health summary. For example, having a history of use of all sorts of types of legal drugs can provide rich information the patient may not understand they are making available.

For Assertion 2 the Government makes it clear all sorts of people in Government may be able to access the myHR records.  It will be interesting to see when we get richer details of just what Government ins doing with the data - as there is just no way the clinical benefits of the current myHR are remotely worth the billions being spent.
Equally Assertion 3 is just begging us to all wait for the first data breach. Sadly it is inevitable and it is just a matter of time - especially if the use of the system expands.
For anyone who wants to understand the full details and risks associated with the myHR can I recommend the following detailed information. It has been carefully researched and provides detailed references for all the points made.
David.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 19th April, 2016.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

E-Health looks to have seriously got into the mainstream press this week. I hope the populous will at some point grasp what a waste of space, money and time the myHeath Record program is!
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Dead people given e-health records in latest bungle for $1 billion government program

April 16, 20167:00am
Sue Dunlevy News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE
THE federal Health Department is setting up My Health records for people who have been dead for over two decades in the latest bungle to beset the troubled $1 billion project.
It comes as a major international technology company CSC last month warned medical practices not to use the My Health Record because of a glitch that meant data for one patient “may be saved against an incorrect patient record”.
And as the Australian Medical Association calls for a major overhaul of the records to integrate them into existing medical software because just 300 GPs are using the records each week.
Four years after it was launched only 75,000 records are populated with a patient health summary that makes them useful to doctors.
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New online tool to teach young athletes about impacts of illegal drugs on sport

A new online tool with the aim of educating young athletes on the impacts of using illegal drugs in sport has been launched by the Federal Government.

Key points:

  • Sports authorities worried about levels of drug use in local community sporting groups
  • Program includes courses for athletes, coaches, officers, presenters and role models
  • Emphasis on showing illegal drugs just as off-limits as performance-enhancing drugs
The Illicit Drugs in Sport e-learning education program uses videos, interactive materials and printouts to educate people on the harmful impact of using illegal drugs in sport and was developed in partnership with the Australian Sports Commission.
Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley said the program was better than any previous resource and would be free for anyone to access.
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Another resources company switches to IT

Mineral exploration company MinQuest is changing tack with the acquisition of medical software developer ePat and a decision to sell off its current mineral projects.
MinQuest has reached a binding agreement to acquire ePat, which has developed a smartphone app that uses face recognition and other indicators of pain to provide a more objective pain assessment of patients who cannot communicate with their carers, such as people with dementia.
The ePat app is based on Curtin University research, and the company plans an early 2017 release for a second version tuned for young children.
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openEHR technical basics for HL7 and FHIR users

Posted on by wolandscat
Recent discussions on the FHIR chat forum with various HL7 people around the topic of how openEHR and other architectural frameworks (e.g. VA FHIM, CDISC) could work with FHIR led to a realisation that some people in HL7 at least don’t understand some of the technical basics of openEHR. This might simply because they have not been involved enough to learn them, but now that we appear to be in the era of FHIR, in which no e-health solution can be without FHIR (according to the now pervasive FHIR hype), I would argue that HL7 now needs to understand some of the basics of the other major architectural frameworks and model-based platforms in e-health – all of which precede FHIR.
One of the catalysts for this discussion was a recent post I made called Making FHIR work for Everybody, in which I proposed that FHIR could be opened up so that FHIR resources could be created that represent the reference models of other model-based architectures. This led to the above-mentioned discussions on chat.fhir.org (openehr channel), in which various misunderstandings about openEHR surfaced. I will now try to address some of these.
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DHS' plan to stop people complaining about MyGov

Inaugural chief digital officer outlines vision.

By Paris Cowan
Apr 12 2016 6:45AM
The Department of Human Service’s MyGov portal is one of the biggest, most visible - and undoubtedly most complained about - digital government initiatives in Australia right now.
It has roughly 9 million registered users - more than the Commonwealth Bank’s Netbank platform and chasing hot on the heels of Qantas’ Frequent Flyer club - and 200,000 visitors every day.
But many of them tear their hair out over the platform and its stringent demands, taking their frustration to outlets like Twitter.
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No more myGov? Federal government quietly plotting transformation of online services

April 13 2016 - 6:31PM
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's pet agency, the Digital Transformation Office, is quietly planning a fundamental rethink of how Australians access government services online.
The office, recently tasked with fixing the troubled myGov website, has unveiled a new prototype to replace thousands of government websites and deliver a long-overdue digital reboot.
Aware of the risks and expectations, acting head Radi Kovacevic said the office had cautiously launched a alpha version of the website to gauge feedback and concerns after an extended period of user research.
Mr Kovacevic, the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet's former chief information officer, said he was personally overseeing a gradual rollout of the project to mitigate risk.
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TPG to deliver 10Gbps network for medical imaging

Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 14 April, 2016 17:08
Telco strikes deal with I-MED Network
TPG will deliver high-speed connectivity to I-MED Network under a deal announced today by the two companies.
TPG did not reveal the value of the contract under which the telco will use its fibre infrastructure to hook up I-MED’s medical imaging clinics but described it as a “a significant multimillion dollar commercial agreement”.
The deal covers a network of 180 clinics. TPG said it would deliver speeds of up to 10 gigabits per second to I-MED’s offices.
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TPG to flex fibre muscle

  • The Australian
  • April 14, 2016 3:58PM

Supratim Adhikari

TPG Telecom is putting its fibre assets to full use with the telco signing a multi-million dollar agreement to build a high speed network dedicated to medical imaging.
The deal will see TPG deliver a network, capable of speeds of up to 10 Gbps, that will connect the 180 sites of Australia’s largest medical imaging clinic I-MED Network.
According to TPG, most I-MED locations will achieve increases of between 20-50 times in network bandwidth.
I-MED Network chief executive officer, Steven Rubic, said that the increased bandwidth will allow the clinics to make full use of their advanced imaging hardware.
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6 wearable technologies doctors need to know about

John Kron | 8 April, 2016 | 
The explosion in wearable technology in recent years may be a commercial fad but many believe it will benefit doctors in treating patients. Australian Doctor takes a look.
Basic is probably the word that best describes the technology used in most pedometers back in the 1990s.
The device attached to your belt. A sensor counted up the steps and, well, that was about it.
Now, compare this with the Samsung belt launched in January.
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Setting the record straight!

Published 12 April 2016
There are a number of positive and negative assertions circulating the media, so each month we will be ‘setting the record straight’ and highlighting which My Health Record rumours are facts and which are not, so you can be confident when dealing with your customers. This month we set the record straight on privacy.
Here are some of the misrepresentations, along with the actual facts:
Assertion: Individuals cannot control who sees their My Health Record
Not true. Individuals can ask their healthcare provider not to upload certain information to their My Health Record and can also choose to be notified when their My Health Record is accessed. They can also set controls to restrict access to certain information in their My Health Record or to prevent certain healthcare provider organisations from seeing anything in their My Health Record. For example, individuals may want to restrict access or ask a provider not to upload their sensitive health information, such as sexual or mental health issues accessible by all healthcare providers.
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High-quality general practice research to continue through MedicalDirector network

With concerns being raised around access to reliable sources of data on general practice, MedicalDirector is committed to continuing its General Practice Research Network (GPRN) to lift understanding around primary care and to help practitioners.
“The future of Australia’s primary health care system relies on quality sources of continuous data and insight into general practice and patient consultations,” MedicalDirector CEO Phil Offer says.
“From our longitudinal database including more than 44 million GP-patient encounters from over four million patients, we can provide extensive information leading to a better understanding of patients, interventions and results. This enables us to uncover robust insights into Australia’s health issues and outcomes.”
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Does technology spell death for the retirement living industry?

By Natasha Egan on April 11, 2016
While technology offers Australia’s retirement village operators a number of opportunities, it could also mean their death, an aged care industry conference will hear this week.
Telstra Health’s national operations manager aged and community care Luke Greive is presenting on the future of technology uptake in retirement villages at LASA Queensland’s state conference on Thursday.
 “I will be covering issues around whether technology will be the death of retirement villages,” Mr Greive told Technology Review.
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Why health apps are bad, and why I'm hooked

Date April 11, 2016 - 8:33PM

Jenna Price

Columnist for The Canberra Times and Daily Life

Every single day, including weekends, I check. And if it hasn't hit the magic 10,000, I ask: "Anyone feel like a walk?"
I hate exercising with a passion.
Yes, yes, I know it's good for me. And I know it will extend my life (which is already 18 months longer than I thought it might be). It will improve my sex life. It will make travelling more fun. What's not to love?
But I find it hard. Every one of the little intervals of running at 11.6km/h is like torture. The inclines, the squats. All of the repetitions of the anti-batwing exercises (where you hold weights out to the side of your body, arms parallel to the floor) are agony.
As for endorphins, it's tremendous some people experience them. Not me. I fear they are an invention of my lovely GP, Dr Pandora, whose gift for pretending fitness is fabulous is wasted on me.
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WA Health locked into paying dubious data centre invoices

Lawyers say no recourse on $44m contract amendments.

By Paris Cowan
Apr 13 2016 6:47AM
WA government lawyers have told the state it has no choice but continue paying data centre operator Fujitsu for $44 million worth of additions to its contract that were signed by uncertified health officials without proper approval.
In February, WA’s auditor general Colin Murphy revealed the systematic abuse of procurement processes behind an $81.4 million blowout in the Health department's centralised computing contract with Fujitsu, which was originally signed for $45 million.
Many of the purchases, which have been traced back to just a handful of IT staff working well beyond their financial delegations, were for services and equipment that were never needed and remain unused by WA Health.
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Bionic eyes set to switch from fantasy to blinking reality

Date April 11, 2016

Marc Moncrief

Consumer Affairs Editor, The Age

Samsung are attempting to patent a contact lens with a built in camera.
Aficionados of the 1970s-era television series The Six Million Dollar Man, rejoice: contact lenses are coming that could make all your bionic-eye dreams come true.
A patent application published last week shows Korean electronics giant Samsung is working on a contact lens with a tiny built-in camera.
The lens, which would be controlled by blinking, includes an antenna that will allow the lenses to speak to your phone.
The patent follows the disclosure last year that a global team of academics, funded by the US defence industry, had developed contact lenses that could give the wearer telescopic vision.
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Revealed: Australia's new cyber security strategy

How the government plans to make the country a "cyber smart nation".

By Allie Coyne
Apr 11 2016 6:50AM
The federal government will lean heavily on the private sector to help it deliver its long-awaited national cyber security policy and initiatives like voluntary infosec health checks for businesses and joint threat sharing centres in capital cities.
iTnews can exclusively reveal the policy, which is expected to be released in the coming weeks, will contain five key pillars intended to help Australia grow by embracing disruptive technologies from a secure footing in all areas of the economy.
The 46-page strategy, sighted by iTnews, is the first update to Australia's national cyber security policy since 2009.
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A great quality tool for health bloggers, podcasters and patients

A while back I came across a new tool for those who, like me, use Dr Google but are concerned about the quality of some of the available online health information.
The tool contains two checklists and has been designed for medical education resource producers, editors, end-users, and researchers. I’ll let the authors explain:
“Through a rigorous research process, a list of 151 quality indicators for blogs and podcasts was formed and subsequently refined to elicit the most important quality indicators. These indicators are presented as Quality Checklists to assist with quality appraisal of medical blogs and podcasts.”
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HL7 and the Ringholm Effect

2016-April-14 | 18:09 By:
HL7 messages are the lifeblood of electronic health communication in many settings in many countries. In the healthcare sector in Australia, for example, they are ubiquitous in hospital settings for notification of patient Admissions, Discharges and Transfers and they are ubiquitous in both hospital and primary care settings for reporting pathology results to the ordering clinician’s or her organisation’s clinical system. Millions of HL7 messages flow between systems  every day in Australia. The vast majority are based on HL7 version 2.3, 2.3.1 or 2.4. These standards are the lingua franca for healthcare messaging.
However, their quality is often less than desirable. There is diversity in the way they are structured and represented from one system to another. The system interfaces that construct, route or process these messages are difficult and expensive to build and maintain. They are intended for point to point communication within a relatively confined and stable eco-system, rather than as components of a national infrastructure to support patient-centred care. Many of their well-known idiosyncrasies embody and epitomise the profound difficulty faced in trying to share information amongst heterogenious systems in healthcare – often dubbed “lack of interoperability”. Some of this “lack of interoperability” is due to shortcomings of, or ambiguity in the HL7 v2 standards. Some is due to ambiguity in implementation guides, or more often, conflict between various implementation guides and between implementation guides and their referenced standards. Some is due to developers’ and implementers’ ignorance or misapplication of the “standards”. Some is due to the lack of standardisation of infrastructure upon which the messages depend – e.g. lack of standardised patient and provider identification infrastructure, or the lack of adequate value set infrastructure to describe clinical concepts.
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All the bottom-line action

April 11, 2016
Orion Health (OHE:NZX/ASX) has signed an agreement with Metro North, the largest health service in the Australian state of Queensland, to deliver its ground-breaking Referrals Management platform. Metro North Hospital and Health Service serves over 900,000 people, and employs more than 16,000 staff in five hospitals and eight community health centres, along with oral and mental health facilities. The Referrals Management platform will enable healthcare professionals to submit, track and manage patient referrals as the individual moves from home to hospital to community care. Orion Health CEO Ian McCrae says the contract with Metro North will be delivered as a subscription license with Orion Health Application Managed Services. “Metro North’s goal of improving health outcomes by providing healthcare professionals across the care continuum with access to comprehensive patient information is closely aligned with our company vision for enabling personalised healthcare,” Mr McCrae says. Orion Health Executive Vice President for Asia Pacific Darren Jones says that Metro North serves one of the fastest population growth regions in Australia and required a data platform that could accommodate the addition of new solutions over time. “Metro North has the ability to extend the functionality of the platform beyond Referrals Management over time through the addition of other modules that support better care coordination between its hospitals, community health centres and other healthcare providers,” he says.
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Why the Orion Health Group Ltd share price jumped 30% in April

By Sean O'Neill - April 12, 2016 |
E-Health solutions provider Orion Health Group Ltd (ASX: OHE) has been on a tear in the past month, following a number of major contract announcements in quick succession.
On 30 March, Orion announced a contract with a major US health insurer. While financial specifics were not provided, if we use the number of patient records Orion manages as a proxy, then the announcement for 3 million patients represented an increase of around 3% on the company’s previous total of 90 million records.
On 6 April, Orion announced it had won a contract with Metro North, the largest health service in Queensland, to provide its Referrals Management software platform. Metro North serves 900,000 people, and Orion believes the company could be convinced to subscribe to additional services from Orion in the future.
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UK expansion continues as Orion Health wins deals in England and Scotland

Currently Orion Health’s software manages over 90 million patient healthcare records worldwide.
Ian McCrae - CEO, Orion Health
Orion Health has signed two contracts that will significantly extend the New Zealand’s company its presence in the United Kingdom, following deals in both England and Scotland.
Terms of the deal will see Orion Health provide a technology solution for two leading hospitals in London, while also implementing an integrated health and social care solution for NHS Fife in east Scotland.
Orion Health CEO Ian McCrae says the success in both countries demonstrates the “substantial impact” that the company is having in the EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) region.
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Orion Health snares new contracts to boost UK presence

New Zealand-based healthcare tech solutions provider Orion Health has secured two new contracts that it says will significantly extend its presence in the UK market.
Orion Health CEO Ian McCrae said the company will provide a comprehensive technology solution for two leading hospitals in London, and implement an integrated health and social care solution for NHS Fife in east Scotland.

McCrae said both contracts will boost the number of patient healthcare records managed by Orion Health software, as the London hospitals care for one million people and NHS Fife and Fife Council serve a population of over 360,000.
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Who’s who of Aussie ICT

April 11, 2016
CANCERAID formed in 2014 by three like-minded doctors with a passion for oncology. Over 14 months the team work has been to develop an application for cancer patients, caregivers and clinicians. CancerAid is a ‘first-of-its-kind innovation that addresses the deficiency in cancer care by providing patients and caregivers an easy to use smartphone application that specifically targets disease illness’s uncertainty. The team developed the product in conjunction with over 100 cancer specialists and 20 Cancer Charities. The app’s fundamental aim is to provide a comprehensive telecommunication service that helps patients particularly those in rural areas, with access to care and mental health services. http://www.canceraid.com.au/
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IBM puts Watson to work on cancer with new patient-advisor tool

It will tap natural language processing and offer personalised advice
Katherine Noyes (IDG News Service) 13 April, 2016 04:36
IBM is developing a new weapon in the battle against cancer that will put Watson to work in a new way. Partnering with the American Cancer Society, IBM is building a virtual advisor that uses machine learning to give patients personalized information and advice.
The advisor will begin by looking at the type of cancer the patient is suffering from, the stage of the disease and the treatments administered so far. Using that and other data, it will try to offer care advice and answer patients' questions.
Watson's voice recognition and natural language processing will enable users to ask questions and receive audible responses.
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Experts crack Petya ransomware, enable hard drive decryption for free

The technique is not exactly straightforward, but it works
Security experts have devised a method that allows users to recover data from computers infected with the Petya ransomware program without paying money to cybercriminals.
Petya appeared on researchers' radar last month when criminals distributed it to companies through spam emails that masqueraded as job applications. It stood out from other file-encrypting ransomware programs because it overwrites a hard disk drive's master boot record (MBR), leaving infected computers unable to boot into the operating system.
The program replaces the drive's legitimate MBR code, which normally starts the operating system, with code that encrypts the master file table (MFT) and shows a ransom note. The MFT is a special file on NTFS volumes that contains information about all other files: their name, size and mapping to hard disk sectors.
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Breakthrough Starshot: Man’s new mission to the stars

  • Tom Whipple
  • April 13, 2016 9:00AM

Hawking, Billionaire Announce Spaceflight to Alpha Centauri

Tiny spaceships will be blasted by laser beams from Earth to explore our nearest star system 25 trillion miles away under plans for the most ambitious space mission in history.
Yuri Milner, a Russian internet billionaire, joined Stephen Hawking to announce proposals for the spacecraft that they believe could travel 1,000 times faster and 2,000 times farther than any man-made object has gone before.
Mr Milner, who will also be collaborating with Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder, said that they would achieve this feat by having a “Silicon Valley approach to space flight ... based on technology already available or likely to be available in the near future”.
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Enjoy!
David.